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This
is the energy expended while resting quietly. It is the metabolic cost
of maintaining the body at rest and accounts for 50-70% of total energy
expenditure in most individuals. Total lean mass, especially muscle
mass, is largely responsible for the BMR. So anything which reduces
lean mass will reduce BMR. It is therefore important to preserve muscle
mass when trying to lose weight. Exercise uses energy directly and maintains
lean body mass, particularly muscle mass, thus maintaining BMR that
determines a significant proportion of total energy expenditure.
Crash
diets can also reduce the metabolic rate, mainly because of their effect
on muscle mass. The greater the muscle mass, the higher the metabolic
rate and hence calories burnt. Severe energy restriction for weight
loss <1200kcal/day (especially if it is not accompanied by increased
physical activity), can result in rapid weight loss. But what is often
not understood is that most of the lost weight is fluid and muscle tissue.
Soon the body takes steps to regain the lost water and weight begins
to rise causing frustration and disappointment. The rapid loss in weight
is seen by the body as a 'famine' situation. In a concerted effort to
survive, the body dramatically reduces its metabolic rate within 24-48
hours from the commencement of dieting. The reduction in basal metabolic
rate may be as high as 45 %. It becomes difficult to maintain the initial
exaggerated rate of weight loss, especially if exercise is not increased.
Food intake needs to be further decreased for a continuing weight loss.
Eventually the crash dieter gives up in frustration as the energy restriction
becomes ridiculously low. Repeated bouts of severe energy restriction
(without accompanying daily exercise) can have a long term effect on
weight loss and the metabolic rate. The body adapts to these constant
periods of 'cyclic fasting' by depressing the metabolic rate to conserve
energy. The result is that diets become progressively less effective
and because they can lower your metabolic rate, they have the potential
to increase your risk of gaining weight even at moderate energy intakes.
Thus the expression "Diets can make you fat".
One
of the controls we have over total energy expenditure is to increase
exercise. Physical activity has heat-producing (thermogenic) effects,
which raises the metabolic rate to a much greater extent than the thermic
effects of food intake or exposure to cold. Apart from the energy used
in the exercise itself, habitual physical activity affects basal metabolic
rate by virtue of its effect on body composition. A study showed that
habitually active individuals have higher BMRs than non-active individuals,
by as much as 5-10%. Since BMR accounts for approximately two thirds
of total daily energy expenditure, this is a significant difference.
The
thermic effect of food is the energy we use to process/metabolise the
food we consume. It is a component of energy expenditure that can be
directly manipulated by altering the ratio of macronutrients of the
diet. As the carbohydrate and protein content increases and the fat
content decreases the thermic effect of food rises; this energy wastage
may assist in the maintenance of normal weight. The greatest energy
wastage occurs for protein where 30% of its calorie value is used for
its metabolism, in contrast the value is 6% for carbohydrate and only
4% for fat. In other words only 4% of the calorie value of the fat consumed
will be used for digestion and metabolism resulting in a low thermic
effect - this partly explains why dietary fat is the most 'fattening'
of the macronutrients. There is now evidence that certain factors in
food, like capsaicins in chillis, may increase the background thermogenic
response to food; this can ultimately increase total daily energy expenditure.
This phenomenon may possibly account for different proneness to obesity
in different food cultures.
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